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Just saw some wild numbers comparing Elon Musk's wealth to what we actually make, and honestly it's kind of mind-bending.
So the average American pulls in around $43k a year. Musk? He's made roughly $147 billion in the last year based on his net worth changes. That's not even close - we're talking about him making 3.3 million times more than the average person.
To put it in perspective, if a $1 bill feels like pocket change to you, that's what $3.4 million feels like to Musk. While most of us earn about $29 per hour, his hourly rate is more like $70 million. And here's the crazy part - he makes about $19,631 every single second. That's how much money does elon musk make a second, which is basically what an average American has to work nearly 5.5 months to earn.
The housing comparison really hits different. Average home price is around $369k right now. Musk's annual income could literally buy him over 1,000 homes. Like, one thousand. Meanwhile most people are stressed about affording even one.
Then there's the restaurant thing - if Musk wanted to buy Chipotle and Texas Roadhouse at their current market valuations, he could do it and still have enough left over to buy dinner for everyone in New York and California combined. All from one year's earnings.
What's interesting is that even with that kind of wealth, the way he manages money isn't that different from how wealthy people usually operate. He's got roughly $130 billion in Tesla stock he can borrow against rather than sell, which lets him avoid capital gains taxes. Smart money move, honestly.
The Tesla angle makes it even more absurd - that Cyberbeast starting at $100k? For Musk, buying it would feel like the state of Texas having to fund their entire budget for two years just to match that same financial pinch. That's the level of wealth gap we're talking about here.